The World Cup result is a disaster for the Ashes

By Paul / Roar Guru

It’s the first of November 2021 and Joe Root would have woken to the news that Eoin Morgan’s men had not only beaten Australia at the T20 World Cup, they’d emphatically demolished them.

Asked to bat first, Australia were all out for 125 and England took less than 12 overs to make the required runs.

Test players Dave Warner and Steve Smith made a collective two runs off seven deliveries, while Jos Buttler smashed 71 off 32 and the Australian Test fast attack was made to look second rate.

At that point, Root must have been laughing loudly. The knives were out in a big way, both from the media and social media.

• Justin Langer was on his last legs as a coach in any format, but particularly T20
• Dave Warner was over the hill
• The squad selected for this tournament was second rate
• Australia was wasting its time playing this format, which we were no good at and we should get our Test guys home early to prepare for the Ashes

(Photo by Matthew Lewis-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

Fast forward to Monday the 15th of November and Root would be horrified at the outcome of the World Cup final.

He above all would be aware just how much of a lift winning this type of tournament will be for all Australian players. After all, he was involved in that World Cup win in 2019, immediately before the Ashes.

He’d also be aware just how down England players will be, not making the final.

Granted, there are not many from the T20 squad joining the rest of the Ashes brigade, but they were clearly expecting to not only beat New Zealand in their semi-final and win the World Cup – but they didn’t.

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There’s no doubt everyone who follows cricket in Australia will be thrilled at the result.

This is a format where we’d never won a major tournament and before this World Cup started, were rightly written off by most pundits as bit players, not likely to figure in the finals.

That the squad made it through to the finals, after that hiding from England and less than stellar performances against some of the other teams, was something of a modern-day miracle.

That this same team managed two huge run chases against quality attacks in the finals to take out the tournament is simply staggering.

(Photo by Gareth Copley-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

The positive energy that will flow from those returning World Cup squad members cannot be underestimated.

There’s no doubt Aussie cricket fans will be keen to let Joe Root know who won this tournament, just as England fans did so when the Ashes Tests were being played.

The one player who will benefit the most is Dave Warner. His batting relies heavily on confidence and a good eye.

If Australia had not made the finals, he’d have had only that one good innings against the West Indies (89) and another 60 odd against Bangladesh. The rest of his tournament had been forgettable.

The team making the finals allowed Warner to play two critical innings where he looked terrific, scoring a combined 112 runs off 68 deliveries and being a huge part of Australia’s finals success.

There’s no doubt Warner will carry that confidence into the Ashes and if he gets a start, he could easily dominate the England bowlers. And it only gets better.

The selectors will be thrilled that the squad they chose was so successful. That will take some pressure off George Bailey in particular, whose early call about Marcus Harris opening in the Test series has raised plenty of eyebrows.

Justin Langer must also feel a lot of weight coming off his shoulders after a high pressure 2021.

Somehow he managed to turn a group of players who were flogged in Bangladesh and the West Indies, then were poor at the start of this tournament, into world champions.

(Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

He and others managed to get team selections right and got momentum building at just the right time, so the team played great cricket when it counted.

There are two rays of hope Joe Root can cling to. The first is that Langer and the other selectors buy into the hype around performances in this tournament and think that translates in a Test spot.

I read on The Roar that Mitch Marsh’s efforts with the bat “will surely thrust him into contention for a spot in the Test team for this summer’s Ashes series.”

It may well give him a chance to play in the proposed intra-squad matches in early December, but there are quite a few guys who have clearly staked strong claims in red-ball cricket, who must be considered before him.

The other ray of hope is complacency. In 2019, England approached that first Test at Edgbaston as one they’d already won.

After all, they hadn’t lost a Test there for a gazillion years. They were feeling euphoric after that World Cup win and thought they only had to turn up to win.

(Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

Until last year, Australia had a similar track record in Brisbane. The Gabba(toir) seemed to be a bogey ground for opposition Test nations.

If the Aussie team does not play their best because they also think they only have to turn up to win, Joe Root’s team could well spring a similar upset like Tim Paine’s team did in their first Test in 2019.

Langer and Paine must somehow tap into the positive vibes from the returning players, but make sure no-one is complacent going into the first Test.

Over the next three weeks, they will both need to get the returning players focused on the Ashes, while still allowing that feel-good mood to permeate the squad.

They also need to take the momentum gained from the World Cup win and use that to encourage all Ashes candidates to really lift.

If they get that right, it could be a very long couple of months for Joe Root’s men.

The Crowd Says:

2021-11-19T12:01:16+00:00

Tanmoy K.

Guest


This T20I World Cup did prove to be a tonic to the couple of Australian players, viz. David Warner and Mitchell Marsh and overall to the Australian team particularly before the Ashes.

2021-11-18T23:04:58+00:00

Republican

Guest


T20 is not Cricket no matter how you pitch it while it is counter productive in preparing for the the Test format I reckon. With that in mind, the Sassenach's will surprise. Truncated versions of the game have certainly seen the devolution of Test Cricket skills, especially in regards to batting. This will be evidenced during the Ashes series while I hasten to say, Australia are more predisposed to ill disciplined batting than are the Albion.

2021-11-18T01:41:08+00:00

Ace

Roar Rookie


Form is everything. I believe it translates into any format and if he believes in himself he would or could play Test cricket if selected So easy to have a run of outs in cricket even when your net work is good. So I say run with a player who sees it as big as Marsh does

2021-11-17T04:03:17+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


It was an odd move. A quiet call to Harris telling him he was in the box seat would have sufficed, you'd think.

AUTHOR

2021-11-17T00:19:03+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Apart from his scores, I'm concerned about his mode of dismissal, James. In the cases where he's been out cheaply, he's been caught on the crease and either lbw or caught by the keeper/slips. Bowlers know to go round the wicket to him and they'll likely have success. You're right 4 innings is a small sample but the signs are worrying IMO. That's why I think the call by Bailey was too early. Give the guy a few more innings to show what sort of form he's really in THEN make the call.

2021-11-17T00:18:08+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


I'm not saying there is - Harris has scored a ton already for a start! Just observing that they made a mistake last season in backing a fringe player who was in horrible form and then couldn't pivot away from him when his form got even worse leading up to the first test. I'm happy for Harris to play the first test, I just question why he needed to be locked in a month in advance, leaving no flexibility if he does disastrously lose form like Burns did last season.

AUTHOR

2021-11-17T00:13:31+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


You're right, Harris last year was the obvious choice becuase we had few if any other alternatives. This year, a few more guys have made some pretty good scores, which suggests to me, this early call is simply premature. Not saying he shouldn't get the gig, but 3 scores under 10 and a second innings hundred is not great form IMO. gain, I've no issues with Harris being chosen eventually but as you said, if he doesn't make a decent score in the next few weeks, the knives will be out. More to the point, he needs first innings runs.

2021-11-17T00:01:40+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Harris was seen as the best option after Burns failed and Pucovski was injured. Since neither of those players is in the running for the first test, and Harris' form has been decent while no other Shield opener has really demanded selection, it seems like he's the logical choice. There's definitely risk involved in naming someone this far out. If he has a poor run over the next few weeks then either they have to go back on their word or they push on and select I guy who isn't in form. But I don't think that's likely to happen - one good innings in his remaining 3-4 knocks before the first test would have the selectors feeling pretty comfortable that he's the best option.

2021-11-16T23:54:54+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


I don't think there's any comparison in terms of their form, Tempo. Burns was having a mare. Harris has had a few low scores but overall he's been in good touch.

2021-11-16T23:53:04+00:00

JamesH

Roar Guru


Paul, you could back through every player's first class career and find patches where they had a few low scores, even when they were in decent touch. Four innings is far too small a sample size to draw any meaningful conclusions. And if you look back through the scores in his last Shield match it was clearly a difficult wicket to start on. Harris' last five FC scores outside of those three failures are 137, 31, 46, 21 and 148. I'm not really see an all-or-nothing pattern there.

2021-11-16T22:59:59+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Harris might blossom don’t be so damning in your predicament, Go Vics :boxing:

AUTHOR

2021-11-16T22:28:30+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


There's no doubt Starc has an outstanding record in d/n Tests, but is he bowling as well now as he was a year or two ago? More to the point, are others like Jhye Richardson bowling as well or better? Both will be named in the Test squad and I'd hope it would come down to what the selectors see in each guy over the next few weeks of practice matches, etc. I'm guessing selectors will lean toward Starc because of that great record, but if he isn't bowling with confidence and Richardson is, why pick him on the off chance he comes good? Still, these same blokes have declared Harris a certainty to play and likely play all series, so what do I know?

AUTHOR

2021-11-16T22:23:42+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I'm sure Davey and the others would have been happy to point out the name "Australia" beside the 2021 winners, to the travelling English players. All very politely of course.

2021-11-16T15:31:31+00:00

Stuckbetweenindopak

Roar Rookie


Unbelievable title

2021-11-16T10:59:25+00:00

Tempo

Roar Rookie


Don’t need to be great against spin in Australia. But I was talking about him not being a great option for the tours to Pakistan and India coming up.

2021-11-16T10:16:01+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


No Starc in the Adelaide d/n Test?

2021-11-16T10:15:20+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Hopefully they passed the trophy around the plane so everyone got a chance to hold it.

AUTHOR

2021-11-16T10:13:05+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


yeah I saw that and thought it could have been a very interesting flight to Australia.

2021-11-16T07:41:36+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


True Bushie - Marsh has pretty much always been a good white ball player. It can be a thankless thing - selecting.

2021-11-16T07:40:32+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


How good against spin do you need to be to counter orthodox trundlers in Australia?

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